Hillary's Inconvenient Truth
The problem with Hillary's experience claims
By Richard H Collins Posted in 2008 | 2008 Democratic Primary | 2008 Presidential Campaign | Barack Obama | Hillary Clinton — Comments (6) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »
The combination of the release of Hillary Clinton’s White House schedules and the mini-scandal over her Bosnia sniper story has reignited the debate surrounding her presidential experience.
What the media seems to be missing is that the schedules and other historical records do not shed much light on the question.
What many on the right seem to ignore is that Hillary was not your typical First Lady. She did play a unique role in her husband's administration.
But her larger claims of experience are problematic in important ways beyond just exaggeration or lack of clear evidence.
To understand why, read on.
Hillary can rightfully claim that she had a close up view of the presidency for eight years. And her time in the White House seems to have included unprecedented influence for a First Lady. But she did so only as an unelected and un-appointed (and thus unaccountable) adviser.
Secondly, her involvement – with the exception of her spectacular failure during the health care debate – was mostly political and unrelated to the kind of executive leadership expected of the president.
Lastly, Hillary’s attempt at being “co-president” was by its nature wrapped up in her complex relationship with her husband and contributed in key ways to the dysfunction of the administration.
When you are an elected or appointed official there are clear lines of authority and accomplishment. When you are a behind the scenes force, as Hillary was, you may wield influence but you can’t claim experience.
The one time she was given formal authority (the health care task force) revealed not only her lack of executive management skills but the problematic nature of having her play such a role. If a cabinet member or high level staffer fails in carrying out the president’s goals then they can be asked to resign. If the president’s spouse fails what happens?
After the health care debacle Hillary did the only thing she could do and she retreated toward more traditional First Lady duties. Does this mean she stopped being involved in her husband’s work? No, but it meant her role would never be formal again.
After the health care failure, Hillary was still involved in the administration, though not as a major policy adviser. Rather she became a self-appointed political defender of her husband’s, and her, interests. She didn’t provide substantive policy advice so much as act as a uniquely positioned political staffer.
Hillary frequently, and often harshly, castigated White House staff when she felt they weren’t serving her husband well. She was often the first person to organize crises management teams to defend her husband and attack his enemies. And she often carried a sort of veto power over critical decisions about appointees and staffing.
One can argue about the wisdom of her advice – much of it was stubborn, overly antagonistic, and harmful – but it is hard to make the argument that this rises to the level of presidential experience. If it is then a host of former White House staffers and advisers are qualified to be president.
Lastly, it is worth pointing out that this power was connected in perverse ways with her relationship with her husband. Because she was the designated political defender, and enabler, of the president, when he was most vulnerable she wielded the most power. When she was down he felt free to act, and when he screwed up she rose in stature.
It is worth pointing out that Americans were at the time, and continue to be, concerned about a dynamic of this nature. Accountability is critical in a democracy and having a key adviser and participant that is unaccountable, and who has “unique” leverage, is a recipe for disaster. This is the rationale behind anti-nepotism laws.
Read any of the copious books covering the Clinton administration and you will find that Hillary was a divisive and disruptive figure who played no small part in the stumbles of the administration.
All of this explains the difficulty she is having in proving that her White House experience counts. Her role was highly unconventional, mostly political and deeply entwined with the dysfunctions and foibles of the Clinton White House.
It should also send a clear warning about the advisability of having Bill Clinton back in the White House. There is no reason to believe that this dynamic will work better in reverse.
The bottom line is that Hillary was mostly an inside political operative whose chief accomplishment was the survival of her husband’s presidency and the launching her own political career.
This surely qualifies as unique experience, but it is anything but presidential.
Of course, neither is losing an argument about your foreign policy credentials with Sinbad.
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Hillary's Inconvenient Truth 6 Comments (0 topical, 6 editorial, 0 hidden) Post a comment »
If your heart was clogged, would you want the wife of the greatest heart surgeon in the world working on you or some kid from Yale doing his first surgery?
I have never understood why being someone wife made you experienced. Makes no sense.
If she wants to tout her national security "experience" gained from her presumed status as a senior member of the (Bill) Clinton administration, she is giving us the rope to hang her with.
Let's refresh on the National Security record of the Clinton administration:
Somalia- someone should have gone to jail for the criminal negligence with which that mission was mismanaged and our troops were hung out to dry.
First World Trade Center Bombing- barely acknowledged, issued a few arrest warrants, no comprehension that WTC 1 represented that the "game" had changed.
Iraqi Assisination attempt on Bush 41- lob a cruise missle at an empty building in Iraq in the middle of the night.
Khobar Tower bombing- do nothing, because it would have been politically incovienent to take action.
Operation Desert Fox- Saddam isn't complying with UN Inspection requirements and other armsitice terms. So lets bomb him for three days to pretend we're tough (or divert attention from *other* things happening at the time) and then let him get back whatever he was doing.
Kenya and Tanzania Embassy bombing- lob a few cruise missles from a thousand miles away at a camel tent and a pharmaceutical factory.
USS Cole bombing- Do nothing, because the Clintons were on their way out, too preoccupied with book contract fees, swiping the silverware, and pardoning tax evaders and (the irony is too rich here) terrorists.
The utter fecklessness of the Clinton adminsitration on National Security issues made the Carter administration look practically Churchillian. If Hillary seriously wants to brag about her national security cred, let's hang this litany of ineptitude, laziness, and cowardice on her all day long.
But I guess Bosnia was the big accomplishment, so if there's ever a need to fight a war at 40,000 ft, Hillary can take that 3am phone call.
Check Michael Ramirez' cartoon from yesterday: http://www.ibdeditorials.com/CartoonPopUp.aspx?id=291415477018129
Says it all....
Sen Clinton claimed the Family and Medical Leave Act to be one of her most meaningful accomplishments. It passes in '90 and '92 only to be vetoed by Bush. All that was necessary was the president's signature.
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Her entire life and career is a lie. That whole "35 years of experience" is the biggest bunch of BS I've ever heard.
“.....women and minorities hardest hit”